Venezuela's ruling Socialist Party holds primaries for November regional election

election

CARACAS, Aug 8 (Reuters) - Venezuela's ruling Socialist Party on Sunday holds a primary to choose candidates for November elections for governors and mayors, an election that may see the return of opposition political parties that have boycotted recent ballots.

Allies of President Nicolas Maduro will vie for the chance to be elected to 23 state and 335 governments municipal governments that have a been a key element of the Socialist Party's dominance of the country's politics.

Sunday's vote comes as the opposition and government prepare to enter into a negotiation process set to start later this month in Mexico, sources told Reuters. L1N2PB320

"Winning the governorships and mayors in the mega-elections on November 21 will give us greater governance in the country," Maduro said on Tuesday in a live broadcast on state television. "The entire opposition knows that we will have clean and transparent elections."

Voting seemed slow in Caracas shortly after polls opened at 7 a.m. on Sunday. There were no lines at polling stations.

The mainstream opposition boycotted presidential and parliamentary elections in 2018 and 2020, arguing they were rigged in favor of Maduro's ruling socialist party. But a coalition in the opposition has said its willing to participate in the November election.

In May, the socialist-held National Assembly named two opposition-linked figures to a new elections council for the first time in years. In June, the head of the electoral council said the government would allow a coalition of major opposition political parties to field candidates in November's elections.

The opposition is still negotiating conditions for participating in November and opposition leader Juan Guaido has not said whether or not he believes candidates should take part.

The opposition, backed by the United States and most Western democracies, labels Maduro a dictator who has clung to power through rigged elections and persecution of opponents. Maduro, supported by Russia and China, labels Guaido a puppet of Washington seeking to oust him in a coup.